How do I figure out whats truly important to me?
_________________
@Fnord
Do you have a link for picking/choosing the correct industry?
You also need to show initiative. Any employer that must constantly tell you what to do and how to do it will eventually tell you to find employment elsewhere. The people who know how to find their own answers will last longer and go farther in their careers than those poor, sad souls who seem to have no idea whether they should "fish or cut bait".
Do I make myself clear?
_________________
You also need to show initiative. Any employer that must constantly tell you what to do and how to do it will eventually tell you to find employment elsewhere. The people who know how to find their own answers will last longer and go farther in their careers than those poor, sad souls who seem to have no idea whether they should "fish or cut bait".
Do I make myself clear?
Very clear, I appreciate your bluntness it's helpful for me personally, I like very direct communication. No feelings hurt. Thank you
You also need to show initiative. Any employer that must constantly tell you what to do and how to do it will eventually tell you to find employment elsewhere. The people who know how to find their own answers will last longer and go farther in their careers than those poor, sad souls who seem to have no idea whether they should "fish or cut bait".
Do I make myself clear?
@Fnord
Do you have any resources which will help me answer those 4 questions?
I know this seems a short reply, but working in lots of different jobs did help me narrow down what I wanted to do.
Are you looking for a job now or are you trying to choose a college course that will help you establish career?
@hurtloam
Looking for a job now. What do you do?
I know this seems a short reply, but working in lots of different jobs did help me narrow down what I wanted to do.
Are you looking for a job now or are you trying to choose a college course that will help you establish career?
@hurtloam
Looking for a job now. What do you do?
I do computery stuff.
I wasn't sure what I wanted to do. I did office work for a long time, but found it boring. I did a multimedia course at a technical college because it taught all sorts of computer related things in creative industries such as sound production, video editing, web design, graphic design, digital photography. I got a taste for a few different things. It was hard finding a job after that because I hadn't focussed on one specific thing; I was a jack of all trades and master of none.
My first job out of college was an office job again. It was all I could get, but because I had done some web dev at college I got to work on the company website which improved my skills. Each job I did after that had some web dev elements and I've ended up on a support desk for a large organisation now, sort of. It's a complicated job to explain. I have to be a jack of all trades in this job to fix issues and solve problems, so basically I'm a master Googler.
I know this seems a short reply, but working in lots of different jobs did help me narrow down what I wanted to do.
Are you looking for a job now or are you trying to choose a college course that will help you establish career?
@hurtloam
Looking for a job now. What do you do?
I do computery stuff.
I wasn't sure what I wanted to do. I did office work for a long time, but found it boring. I did a multimedia course at a technical college because it taught all sorts of computer related things in creative industries such as sound production, video editing, web design, graphic design, digital photography. I got a taste for a few different things. It was hard finding a job after that because I hadn't focussed on one specific thing; I was a jack of all trades and master of none.
My first job out of college was an office job again. It was all I could get, but because I had done some web dev at college I got to work on the company website which improved my skills. Each job I did after that had some web dev elements and I've ended up on a support desk for a large organisation now, sort of. It's a complicated job to explain. I have to be a jack of all trades in this job to fix issues and solve problems, so basically I'm a master Googler.
@hurtloam
I would also define myself as a bit of a master Googler. Well for my own problems at least. I worked in IT before but the lack of training & support I struggled with. Also the fact all calls are problems there isn't any down time to breathe where everything is going well and everything is working because you only hear from people when something is broken or they have a problem you need to fix yesterday. How do you deal with solving very difficult problems on a very tight deadline?
Yes, I've had jobs with a bad lack of training. It was horrifically stressful.
This job isn't too bad with time sensitivity. I don't cope well under pressure. I can discuss things with my team and there are other departments that I can talk to for complicated issues that my team can't fix.
Thankfully I don't get deadlines that are too tight.
I get projects to work on too, so there's a bit of collaboration and it's not all problems and stressed out people I'm dealing with.
First decide if you want a survival job or a career. Survival jobs are the 'whatever you can get' types of jobs that pay your bills. But the risk is that you might not know until you get it if it fits you. I've had a few such jobs that I only lasted in for a day or a week. If you do find a good fit, you might limit yourself to that field. Then you're developing a career. That requires determination and making choices.
Best case scenario is using survival jobs to fund training for a career. Hardest thing is to keep on track and not drifting in a survival job that you're successful in. Such jobs could end any time, and then you start the rat race again. Careers increase employability.
Once you've determined which of the two models you'll pursue, you might look online for articles about about autists and work, getting to know yourself tests, etc.
_________________
assumption makes an 'ass' out of 'u' and 'mption'.
This job isn't too bad with time sensitivity. I don't cope well under pressure. I can discuss things with my team and there are other departments that I can talk to for complicated issues that my team can't fix.
Thankfully I don't get deadlines that are too tight.
I get projects to work on too, so there's a bit of collaboration and it's not all problems and stressed out people I'm dealing with.
@hurtloam
Hi hurtloam, can you PM me? I tried to PM you but it didn't send. Thanks
This job isn't too bad with time sensitivity. I don't cope well under pressure. I can discuss things with my team and there are other departments that I can talk to for complicated issues that my team can't fix.
Thankfully I don't get deadlines that are too tight.
I get projects to work on too, so there's a bit of collaboration and it's not all problems and stressed out people I'm dealing with.
@hurtloam
Hi hurtloam, can you PM me? I tried to PM you but it didn't send. Thanks
I got your message. You should have a response from me sent earlier today.
Best case scenario is using survival jobs to fund training for a career. Hardest thing is to keep on track and not drifting in a survival job that you're successful in. Such jobs could end any time, and then you start the rat race again. Careers increase employability.
Once you've determined which of the two models you'll pursue, you might look online for articles about about autists and work, getting to know yourself tests, etc.
@DoniiMann
"Hardest thing is to keep on track and not drifting in a survival job that you're successful in."
You are definitely right about that!
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